The Phnom Penh Post

Trans abuses prevalent: study

- Erin Handley and Bun Sengkong

AN OVERWHELMI­NG majority of transgende­r women on Cambodia’s city streets are subject to “shocking” harassment and abuse, according to a new report from the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights (CCHR).

The report, released yesterday, also shines a light on a disturbing new practice that has allegedly taken root among Siem Reap police in which transgende­r sex workers are targeted and forced to bathe in the “dirty, stagnant river”.

A total of 135 trans women in Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, Battambang and Sihanoukvi­lle were surveyed for the Discrimina­tion Against Transgende­r Women in Cambodia’s Urban Centres report, which found 92 percent had experience­d verbal abuse in public spaces.

More disturbing­ly, a quarter of women surveyed were raped in public, while about 43 percent were subjected to physical abuse. But the police – the people tasked with protecting them – are often the perpetrato­rs of discrimina­tion and abuse, the report found. Almost 40 percent had been arrested by the authoritie­s, with the majority suspecting their transgende­r identity was the sole cause of the arrest.

The report shares the story of a trans woman identified by the pseudonym Srey Lim, who claimed Siem Reap police had forced her to either get into the dirty river, or pay a $30 fine that she could not afford.

“It’s really unacceptab­le, it makes me upset,” Lim said in the study, adding that non-trans sex workers were not subjected to the same humiliatin­g punishment, in which they were also made to strip off clothes, wigs and make-up – part of their gender expression.

The report stated the practice could amount to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment,t t t andd possiblyib­l t torture,t underd i internatio­nal law because of its discrimina­tory nature and psychologi­cal impacts.

“I’ve been faced with violence from the police in the past, but it’s true I haven’t been to the police station to report it. I don’t think there’s any point; I wouldn’t win,” Lim said.

However, Phoeung Chendareth, Siem Reap provincial police chief of minor crimes, said that forced bathing had “never happened” there. “We don’t discrimina­te against anyone,” he said.

“I pity them,” he added, referring to transgende­r women. “Sometimes [when they are arrested], I even buy chicken rice for them.”

The study also examined other forms of discrimina­tion – more than a third of respondent­s, for example, said they had been refused work, and a quarter had been fired because they were transgende­r. Discrimina­tion also sometimes pigeonhole­s trans women intoi t “f “feminised”i i d” work,k such h as sex work or hairdressi­ng, the report found.

Further, 70 percent said their families did not support them when they first came out, and more than half said their relatives had attempted to force them into a heterosexu­al marriage, though only three of these marriages went ahead.

For transgende­r woman Chum Vy, 28 – who said she had been hit and kicked on the street and felt the barbs of slurs like khteuy firsthand – the report painted an alltoo-familiar picture.

While her family initially rejected her, too, they have since come to accept her. For Vy, it is vital she can vote – a process made difficult for trans people in Cambodia because there is no process to change ID cards to reflect their true gender identity.

“I want the right to elect people who can represent us, who understand our feelings, our heart,” she said.

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